The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 02, 1947, Image 2

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2—The Bulletin, Mu. Joy, Pa., Thursday, January
2, 1947


: The Mount
ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901


Subscription, per year .. $2.00
Six Months ....:%.... 5. $1.00
Three Months ............ 60
Single Copies ............ 05
Sample Copies FREE
Entered at the Postoffice at Mt
ter under the Act of March 3, 1879
bills but they
a protection as yet,
hospital
found
grocery bills. ¥
oo 0
its sugar production, we surely
hope stme of the sweet stuff finds
its way over here. I know some
fellows who were rationed to a
pencil eraser full per cup while
many were compelled to drink it
“bare-footed.”
Pog © 00
PRES. TRUMAN PROCLAIMS
HOSTILITIES ENDED
| President Trumar on Tuesday
proclaimed the end of hostilities
of the Second World War at noon
tcday and thereby terminated 18
wartime statutes and limited the
life of 33 others.
¥ ® 00
3 PRICES LEVELING OFF
Since the OPA was practically
junked, as was expected, prices on
many commodities soared sky-high,
but within a short time they began
to drop. This has been the case for
weeks and we, predict a continu-
ance for some When
they get nearer normal, supply and
demand will regulate, This is as it
should be.
One of the biggest drops in food
came immediately following Christ-
mas when butter dropped ten cents
per pound. The price of eggs also
dropped sharply.
® eo 0
CAREFUL WITH THE COOKIES
Extension eof canning sugar
stamps was a relief to houscholds,
but we had hoped that by this time
there would be a greater supply on
hand. Cane sugar shipped from
Cuba is in smaller quantity this
year than last. Sugar sent to Europe
dips into eur supply. With an in-
crease in the country’s population
the domestic sugar allotment ef a
: half-million tons more will have to
¢ go farther. The whole world’s sugar
i production for this year is the least
jf has been in 25 years. Prospects
or next year point to an increase
but it is reported to be so small
hat the housewife will still have
o watch in ‘her baking, table use
nd canning.
1
® ® 0
PLEASE, NOT THAT!
We voiced a faint protest when
they suggested a peacetime use of
radar, for locating schools of fish
to save fisherman time and con-
sequently to spoil their fun. When
we recently read of a French
scientist whe claims a discovery
io turn night into day, we loudly
{ object. Lose night in Mount Joy?
What of fireside comforts, the bed-
‘ time goodnight of children, the
_ friendliness of lamplight, smoke
~curling against a winter night sky,
the loss of darkness to cloak a
"goodnight kiss, the close of day's
toil when body seeks its rest in
soothing darkness, the joy of sum-
imey shadows cast by meonglow on;
lawns, the night cries of birds and
animals, the beauty of stars be-
Jewelling the derk sky? Night is
‘man’s right and may heaven keep
iit such,
® 8s 0
TIMING THE BRAKES
E Wircter driving is more dangerous
' than at any season and takes extra
| precautions. Checking brakes,
chains on icy streets, workable
windshield wipers, defresters, are
winter “musts.” The heaviest bur-
‘den Jies with the patience of the
driver, his physical well-being is
& definite safety factor. Analyzing
1006 consecutive accidents in an

Published Every Thursday at No.
9-11 Fast Main St., Mount Joy, Pa.
Joy, Pa, as second-class mail mat-
EDITORIAL
Duty may come before pleasure
but nine out of ten men seem to
prefer the second, first.
| ® vv @
: Hospitalization protects ene from
| haven't
from
With Russia expecting to double
. {cluded a reading by Mrs. Franklin
Joy Bulletin
Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher
; 4 Loan UARY {on
39334
5% 10 11
113i 15,1617 18
19 20,1 22'23 24 25
2612728 29 30 3 p~


RE

braking as well.
® ® 0
TIME WILL TELL
must conserve and maintain
farm land. Soil is not like
natural resources. Land that is fer-
bad we can’t dig deeper as surface
soil becomes poor, and strike
washed away it is gone and it takes
gener:tions to replace its richness.
Replacirg topsoil restores the land's
security, and it
that we should lose our source of
ford because of ignorance or
neglect of it. In the earlier days
when the pepulation was not so
great, farmers didn’t think it so
necessary to protect the soil. Today
having little undiscovered product-
ive land, we must maintain that
which we till. All types of mech-
anized equipment as cotton pick-
ers, combines, corn-pickers, milk-
ing machines, tractors, increase
production but without fertile soil
the equipment is of litle use.
We know of the help of the Soil
Conservation Department, of the
splendid work «of the agents in
districts through-cut . the country.
Information is available to any one
through this agency and al agri-
culturists shold take advantage of
their service.
oo 0
REGISTER A PROTEST
To reise the standard of radio
programs it is up to the radio lis-
teners ic demand better ones. The
daytime schedules of soap operas.
me following another with little
difference in content, brings com-
plaint frem those who would like
better balanced radio diet.
such programs are the least ex-
pensive network shows, the weekly
cost of an ordinary soap opera is
said to be less foy five fifteen-min-
ute periods than some advertisers
spend on one “spot” announcement,
The advertiser uses this means to
sell his product and if such attracts
more listeners who
than those who seek
grams, you will get soap operas.
We cite this type of program but
there are other kinds of broadcasts
that show a profit to the advert-
iser but none to the listener.
Since
better pro-
air channels and the public owns |
those channels. Profits from radio |
are therefore large. The public |
spends $25 for receiving equipment |
for every $1 the broadcasters spend |
for transmitting equipment. We pay
83 to every $2 the advertiser spends |
to keep the program going and we |
buy the advertiser's preducts be- |
sides. Citizens should get their |
money’s worth. In some areas com- |
mittees of radio listeners work |
through the local station to raise
the standard of programs. The Fed-
eral Communications Commission
determines whether a station's ap-
plication for broadcasting can go
through. The public has the power
to ask this board for satisfaction
before they renew the station’s
contract. This encourages better
radio programs and will add more
interested listeners to the com-
mercials.
LANDISVILLE
There were 32 members of the
Service Mothers’ Club present at the
Christmas party Monday evening.
Following the business meeting, a
New Year's prayer was read by Mrs.
Ira Hess. Mrs. Clarence Reist had |
charge of the programy which in-


Horst; accordion selections by Mary
Elizabeth Davis; group: singing; a
reading by Mrs. Clay! Miller, the
exchange of gifts and luncheon.
ee A I i
Five Presidents of the United
States were born in the New Eng-
land states. They were John Adame,




John Quincy Adams, Pierce Arthur
and olidge
LO
ing of car brakes but of emotional
Soi] must be sustained as it is
used. For its cwn good America
the
other
tile is not permanently and the
amourt of fertile ground is not as
enormous as we might think. Too
it Geltmacher.
rich. When the topsoil is blown or
is inconceivable
“don’t care” |
Don't forget that radio stations | Kauffman on Sunday at Ironville. | Trinity Evangelical Cong. Church
do net have to pay for the use of |
at Columbia Tuesday.


| Religious
re News In This
LONG AGO {Community

20 Years Ago
The Snitzelbunk Band of town,
won first prize at the Lancaster
Mummer’s parade.
J. Willis Freed purchased the |
Milroy H. Brown property on West | Rev. C. A. Price, Minister
Main street. | Dr. E. W. Garber, Supt.
Mr. and Mrs. Fl: Shank, S. Bar- | Sunday, January 5, 1947
Lara street, celebrated their o5th i 9:30 aim. Church School
{ 10:30 a.m. The Service
Theme: The Lord’s Prayer
COMMUNITY.
Methodist Church
Mount Joy, Pa.


|
anniversary.
fon poem “On The Threshold”
| written by Miss Naomi S. Wolge-
ig was published in The Bul | vies to be held ti oar church.
etin.

Fshleman Bros., are now in their |
new location at the Mt. Joy Hall
Building.
The Choir of the Lutheran
Church held a delightful party at
the Parsonage.
Mrs. Susan Derr who celebrated
her 74th birthday, was honored
with a package surprise.
Markets: Eggs, 40-42c; Lard, 17c
and Butter, 40c.
A kitchen shower was given in
of Mr. and Mrs. Abram
|
Salunga Methodist
Rev. C. A. Price, Minister
Miss Alice Strickler, Supt.
Sunday, January 5, 1947
9:30 a.m. Church School
7:30 p.m. The Service
Theme: The Lord's Prayer
ing the “Week of Prayer,” for ser-
vice to be held in our church.
The Calvary Bible Church
(formerly Gospel Tabernacle)
Rev. Roy S. Forney, Pastor
Sunday, January 5, 1947
9:30 am. Bible School
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship
Communion service.
honor
High Schoo] and Alumni basket-
ball teams played to a 30-30 score,
then Jim Krall for the Alumni
came through with a horseshoe
shot, nosing out the high school| 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship
lads by 2 pointss Theme: “Ye do err, not knowing
M’ss Julia Fair, Florin, enter- | the Scriptures.”
Wednesday
7:30 p. m. Prayer Service.
tained her classmates, the Senior
Class of 1925 to a New Year's eve
party.
St Mark's
Evangelical United Brethren
Ezra H. Ranck, Pastor
Sunday, January 5, 1947
9:00 a.m. Sunday School
10:15 a.m. Morning Worship
Holy Communion.
7:30 p.m. Pageant, “The
Wise Men”, by the young people
of the church. Followed by Holy
Communion.
Tuesday to Friday
Week of Prayer Services as an-
nounced elsewhere,
Friday
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal
The 17 year locusts are soon to
appear again.
Plans have been filed with the
State Highway Dept., to widen the |
Harrisburg Pike to 120 feet.
Fhillip Dattisman former deputy
Sheriff was named merchantile ap-
pra‘ser of Lancaster County.
Dr. W. D. Chandler was appoint-
ed a member of the Board of
Health,
Mr. C. Nissley Greider was elect-
ed president of the Literary So-
ciety which was organized at New-
town.
Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Snyder enter-
tained to a party in hcnor of Supt.
and Mrs. J. W. Weeter at Patton
Masonic Institute for Boys at Eliz-
abethtown.
Foster Frye,
rlaced Witmer Eberle, of this place
¢s reperter for the Lancaster In-


St. Luke's Episcopal Church
. Rev. G. M. Rutter, Pastor
Sunday, January 5, 1947
Elizabethtown res Second Sunday after Christmas.
9:15 a.m. Church School
10:30 a.m. Morning Prayer

telligencer. Monday
9:00 Feast of the Epiphany, Eu-
charist,
N EWTOWN Wednesday

6:30 p.m. Choir Practise
and | Friday

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fogie
son, Thomas visited Mr. and Mrs, |
Isaac Kame, Roy, Emma Barton, |
May Nace and Mr. and Mrs. Har- ET
vey Barton at Columbia, Route 1, | Mt. Joy Mennonite Church
on Wednesday and also called on | Sunday, January 5, 1047
Mr. and Mrs. George Matheny, = 9:00 am. Sunday School.
Vestry meeting at Mr. Harold
Brown's house.



| Marietta. 10:00 am. Vivian Eby returned
| Mr. and Mrs. Abram Gambey and | Missionary from Africa will speak. |
family visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl : 7:30 bm Young Peoples’ Mesi-
| Gamber and family at Ironville on | ng. Vivian Eby will speak.
{ Wednesday. Friday
| Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Witmer and 7:30 pm. Bible Study
| family visited Mr. and Mrs, John | =


Mr. Roy Barton and Miss Anna- | L. Dallas Ziegler, Pastor
belle Huber visited Mr. and Mrs. | Sunday, January 5, 1947
Wm. Fogie and sen, Thcmas on 9:30 am. Sunday School
Tuesday evening. 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship
Mrs. Marvin Garner and children| 730 pm. Evening Worship |
and Mrs, Harry Breneman visited | Monday
Mrs. Lillian Witmer and family on 7:00 pm. The Official Board will
Thursday. meet at the church.
Mrs. Lillian Witmer and Mrs, | 8:00 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
Daniel Moore visited Mrs. Harry | January 3 to 12 — Week of Prayer |
Weaver and family on Friday. | Services.
Mr. Maris Gainer and Mr. Paul |
Strickler were Sunday guests of |
Mis. Annie Risser, Evangelical U. B. Church
Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Anrdt spent | Rev. J. E. Earhart, Pastor
the week end with their daughter | Sunday, January 5, 1947
|

Newtown
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ha. 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
bet Khelgathian and ‘children at | 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship
Chester. Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Geltmacheg | 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting & C.E.
spent Christmas with hep perentS, |

Chureh Of God
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kiehl at Rev. C. F. Helwig, Past
Brunnerville, EY: = Pastor
SI | Sunday, January 5, 1947
FILES SUIT FOR $153.95 9:30 am. Sunday School
REPAIR BILL FOR AUTO | 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship
Kermit S. Oberholtzer, Mount Joy Sermon — “Fellow He'rs in Christ” |
R1, filed a suit in the Court House! 130 P-m. Evening Worship
Tuesday against Warren Mueller, | HOY Communion Services
samie address, asking $153.95 for a| Wednesday
car repair hill he claims he had to| 615 Pm. Junior Christian En-
pay as the result of a collision of | deavor :
their two automobiles last October | 730 Pm. Prayer meeting and
| Bible Study.
8:30 p.m. Choir Rehearsal
19.
Cherholtzer is claimmg his car |
was struck by a truck driven Ly the
defendant while he was traveling on |
the highway leading from Mt. Joy Fannie M. Longenecker, Rheems.
to Maytown. The statement of and Ray M. Lengenecker, Eliza-
claim charges Mueller with driving bethtown R1, and Ruth M. Long-
out of a lane onto the highway op- | enecker, Rheems, to use the name
posite the southern terminus of! Longenecker Farm Supply” at
Chocolate Avenue and striking the | Reems.
side of the plaintiff's auto.
——— Ermer
John Kramer, eighty-seven,

GET A TRADE NAME

Miss Ruth Ebersole, forty-two,
died | formerly of Elizabethtown, died at |
J} Harrisburg.
NEWS PERTAINING TO ALL THR
CHURCHES IN MT. JOY ANID
THE ENTIRE SURROUNDING
Note Schedule of Service concern-
ing the “Week of Prayer,” for ser-
Week of Prayer Services as an- |
Three |
| the action of the oxythiamine is not |
| due to a merely toxic action, they
| panel exposure station located on! i
| Calif., barnacle growth during the
{ month ou concrete or glass panels. |
| eight-month exposure Reriod.
| ida, the attachment of over 10,000 |
| posed surface within a 30-day period | i
| has been recorded.
| clots, the Surgeon General's Office
\


I LITITZ MAN SPOKE-TO |
| Believe Humans, Mastodons |THE ROTARIANS TUESDAY
i i i \ Newton Buch, retired industrial |
Lived in Florida in leo Age | Newto Ee
There is a high probability that ol Lauiz, 7 58 Pe
humans and inastodons lived in |e" at the noon meeting of the Rotary |
Florida at the same time—possibly [Club Tuesday at Hostetter’s. he
as much as 10,000 years ago near spoke of his travels in for:zign coun- |
the end of the last ice age. Such
is the implication of a reconstruc-
tion of the so-called Melbourne skull
in the light of developments in an-
thropology during the past decade
by Dr. T. Dale Stewart, curator of
physical anthropology of the Smith-
sonian Institution.
Lr Sh was found abut land Ontario, Canada, and John E.
ley, Smithsonian - paleontologist, | Bocth, A. G. G. N. third class, Cor-
near Melbourne, Fla. There .was |pus Christi, Texas.
strong suggestive evidence that it ED SE
was contemporaneous with bones of
mastodon and other now extinct ani-
mal forms. The geological strata
indicated that the fragments had re-
mained ever since undisturbed in
their original position,
tries.
Visiting Rotarians were Henry G. |
Bucher, Dr. N. B. Laughton. A. C. |
Baugher, all of the Elizabethtown |
ciub. Lewis Edwards of the Lan- |
caster Club also was a guest. Other
|
guests were Tom Lyons, Aurora,


ROBERT BALMER FACES A
| CHARGE OF ADULTERY
Cfficer Elmer Zerphey arrested
Robert M. Balmer, Monday
night for adultery and for bastardy
on
|
|
Dr. Gidley’s report at the time | charged by Noah H. Gephart in |
caused considerable controversy. | behalf of his 18 year cld daughter,
| The skull, as reconstructed by | Catherine.

somewhat crude methods at the
Balmer posted $500.00 bail for a |

time, was identified as that of a y :
typical Florida Indian of a relative- | hearing before Squire Hocken- |
ly late date. It was, the reconstruc- | kerry. |
tion indicated, a round skull. But | rent {RM ee
despite this Dr. Gidley and his fel- | Many a horse is glad there
low paleontologists persisted that | beef and pork available on |
the position of the fragments could |
|
more
not have been due to burial. Dis-| Meat counters. |
|

satisfied with certain aspects of the |
reconstruction, Dr. Stewart has torn | (
it apart and refitted the fragments ls
together in a more logical fashion. | WANTED
The result is long-headed—the if
posite of the original reconstruction. .
Moreover, since the Melbourne skull | Men and Girls
controversy in 1925, indisputable |
{ evidence has been found that man |
| lived on this continent in associa- |
tion with many extinct mammals, |
| including mastodons. This was cer- |
tainly true in the Southwest. |
|
|
1
|

|
Light and Clean Fac- |
tory Work on Pillow {|
Cases
|



Experienced Or
Find Compounds Checked
Learners
| Congestive Heart Failure
Vitamin E and digitoxin prevent | High Rate ot Pay
A-1 ‘Working
| Conditions
* Call For
3 Mount Joy Mills Inc.
125 Mount Joy St.
Mount Joy, Pa.
| ed the ‘chemical action which in- |
duces congestive heart failure in ex- |
periments reported by Dr. William |
| M. Govier of Glenolden, Pa. with |
the technical assistance of Naomi |
Yanz and Mary E. Grelis. The ul-
timate cause of congestive heart
| failure usually can be traced to poor
oxygen supply to the heart muscle.
Vitamin E, digitoxin, and similar
compounds apparently prevented
the breakdown of a vital coenzyme
occurring from a chemical action
when the heart muscle tissue of a
guinea pig lacked oxygen and vita-
min E, This vital coenzyme in the
tissue, he said, is the one respon-
sible for metabolism of lactic acid,
*‘the preferred fuel for heart muscle
contraction.”
Dr. Govier pointed out that these
reactions were noted in finely-divid-
ed heart tissue under artificial c¢on-
ditions, and their role in the metab-
olism of the intact heart of the
guinea pig or other animals is yet
to be determined.
a a,

|
|
|
Interview at:
|
|
} 9-5-tf


SY
Pas
OH, GRACE, SOME OF
THE BEST BARGAINS |
IN THE PAPER TODAY /
LET! GO SHOPPING!
ILL MEET

Study Antivitamins
An antivitamin, one of the sub-
stances which work counter to vita- |
mins, that brought death to mice |
| starved for vitamin Bl was reported |
| by Morris Soodak and Dr. Leopold |
| Cerecedo of Fordham university. |
The experiments were made in a
quest for new or better medicines
to combat disease. The antivitamin |
which killed mice lacking B1 is oxy- |
thiamine. But mice made ill in this |










way recovered when they were | {
give large doses of vitamin Bi | |
(thiamine), they said. This indi- | |
cates that a true antagonism or | |
competition exists between this vita- |
min and its antivitamin, and that |

























said. Work is being continued to de- | i
termine whether antivitamins could |
play an important role in thera-| :
peutics if they are used in con- | E
junction with the sulfa drugs and |
other antibiotics.
Barnacles Multiply |
Fouling organisms on ship bot-|
toms can grow with amazing rapid- |
ity, even in temperate waters. At!
the Mare Island paint laboratory's | i

Drake's Bay, near San Francisco, | i
summer frequently exceeds two
pounds per square foot in a single |
At this same station mussel fouling |
on non-toxic panels often exceeds | i
five pounds per square foot within an 3
Mus. | i
sel fouling nine inches thick, weigh- |
ing 25 pounds per square foot of | i
exposed surface has been reported
on buoys moored for three years off | |
Cape Cod. In Biscayne Bay, Flor- | AR

barnacles per square foot of ex-|


|
Keeps Blood Circulating
Loss of limbs after exposure to se- |
vere ccld is caused by the Led blood
cells forming elots which plug blood |
vessels. This situation can be pre. |
vented by injection of heparin, a|
substance which prevents blood!

Think of it — a quality
Imported Rum yet duty
free. It comes from the
Virgin Islands —a U. S.
possession. Try it soon!
Your Choice — Light or Dark
“Dark” Code No. 1469 “Light” Code No. 1474
$308
4/5 QUART ¢
BERKE BROTHERS DISTILLERIES INC.
BOSTON, MASS.

reports. Tests of the heparin were
made on rabbits. After receiving
the heparin, their limbs were ims|
mersed in alcohol at a temperature
of 24 degrees below zero Fahren- :
heit,’a temperature colder than hu. | &
man beings ever are called upon te
experience. The rabbits seemed lit.
tle the worse off when their limbs
were thawed.
— A An
Everybody in this locality reads
The Bulletin—that's why its adver-
fisers get such excellent results. 8





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Florida
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Red Rome Beauty Apples 3 x 25¢
Sweet Potatoes Voyond Golden J Ibs 25e
Yellow Onions Us. ro. 1 3 bb beg
Cauliflower Arion swore large head
Anjou Pears 2 bs 29e
New Green Cabbage son b Se
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SALTINES
29
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Websier's .... 3 18-0z cans 35
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